Abstract

BackgroundCancer and stroke, which are known to be associated with one another, are the most common causes of death in the elderly. However, the pathomechanisms that lead to stroke in cancer patients are not well known. Circulating extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a role in cancer-associated thrombosis and tumor progression. Therefore, we hypothesized that cancer cell-derived EVs cause cancer-related coagulopathy resulting in ischemic stroke.MethodsSerum levels of D-dimer and EVs expressing markers for cancer cells (epithelial cell adhesion molecule [CD326]), tissue factor (TF [CD142]), endothelial cells (CD31+CD42b-), and platelets (CD62P) were measured using flow cytometry in (a) 155 patients with ischemic stroke and active cancer (116 − cancer-related, 39 − conventional stroke mechanisms), (b) 25 patients with ischemic stroke without cancer, (c) 32 cancer patients without stroke, and (d) 101 healthy subjects.ResultsThe levels of cancer cell-derived EVs correlated with the levels of D-dimer and TF+ EVs. The levels of cancer cell-derived EVs (CD326+ and CD326+CD142+) were higher in cancer-related stroke than in other groups (P<0.05 in all the cases). Path analysis showed that cancer cell-derived EVs are related to stroke via coagulopathy as measured by D-dimer levels. Poor correlation was observed between TF+ EV and D-dimer, and path analysis demonstrated that cancer cell-derived EVs may cause cancer-related coagulopathy independent of the levels of TF+ EVs.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that cancer cell-derived EVs mediate coagulopathy resulting in ischemic stroke via TF-independent mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Cancer and ischemic stroke are two of the most common causes of death in the elderly and have been reported to be associated with one another.[1] [2] [3] The number of people living with cancer is increasing worldwide due to an increase in life expectancy globally and due to the advances in cancer therapy

  • Cancer Cell-Derived Extracellular Vesicles and Stroke demonstrated that cancer cell-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) may cause cancer-related coagulopathy independent of the levels of Tissue factor (TF)+ EVs

  • Our findings suggest that cancer cell-derived EVs mediate coagulopathy resulting in ischemic stroke via TF-independent mechanisms

Read more

Summary

Background

Cancer and stroke, which are known to be associated with one another, are the most common causes of death in the elderly. The pathomechanisms that lead to stroke in cancer patients are not well known. Circulating extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a role in cancer-associated thrombosis and tumor progression. We hypothesized that cancer cell-derived EVs cause cancer-related coagulopathy resulting in ischemic stroke

Methods
Results
Introduction
Results from Path Analysis of Data
Discussion
Limitations and Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call